Poe Collection: Letter from Edgar Allan Poe to John Allan, 1829 February 4

Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809-1849

Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library

All on-line databases

About the electronic version


Poe Collection: Letter from Edgar Allan Poe to John Allan, 1829 February 4
Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809-1849


Creation of machine-readable version: Razia Saleh, South African History Archive

Conversion to TEI.2-conformant markup: Razia Saleh, South African History Archive ca. 10 kilobytes
This version available from the University of Virginia Library
Charlottesville, Virginia

     Publicly accessible


http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/modeng/modengP.browse.html
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/rbs/99/
1999
Note: Manuscript page images have been included from the original source.
About the print version


Poe Collection: Letter from Edgar Allan Poe to John Allan, 1829 February 4
Edgar Allan Poe
4 p.
Source copy consulted: Valentine Museum manuscript
Note: Original lineation has been preserved.

     Prepared for the University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center.


Published: 1829-02-04


English nonfiction prose masculine Special Collections LCSH
Revisions to the electronic version
October 1999 corrector Carolyn Fay, Matthew Gibson, Lisa Spiro and Johnnie Wilcox
  • Updated tagging and transcription; added informational notes.



  • etextcenter@virginia.edu. Commercial use prohibited; all usage governed by our Conditions of Use: http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/conditions.html

    Summary

          Manuscript, Valentine Museum, Richmond, Virginia; Poeasks Allan for his assistance in procuring a cadet's appointment for him to West Point. Poe also states that he is in debt which places him in an "uncomfortable situation".

    Envelope


         


          122
    John Allan Esq
    Richmond
    Va

          Edgar A Poe
    Feby 4th 1829


    Poe Collection: Letter from Edgar Allan Poe to John Allan, 1829 February 4
    Manuscript, Valentine Museum, Richmond, Virginia


    -1-





    Fortress Monroe February 4th 1829,

    Dear Sir

          I wrote you some time ago from this place
    but have as yet received no reply. Since that time
    I wrote to John Mc.Kenzie desiring him to see
    you personally & desire for me, of you, that you
    would interest yourself in procuring me a
    cadets' appointment at the Military Academy.

          To this likewise I have received no answer, for
    which I can in no manner account, as he
    wrote me before I wrote to him & seemed to
    take an interest in my welfare.

          I made the request to obtain a cadet's appoint-
    -ment partly because I know that (if [illeg.]my
    age should prove no obstacle as I have since
    ascertained it will not) the appointment
    could easily be obtained [ either] by your personal ac-
    -aquaintance with Mr. Wirt or by the recom-
    -mendationof General Scott, or even of the
    officers residing at Fortress Monroe & partly
    because in making the request you would
    at once see to what direction my "future
    views & expectations" were inclined.

          You can have no-idea of the immense


    -2-





    advantages which my present station in the
    army would give me in the appointment of
    a cadet -- it would be an unprecedented
    case in the American army. & having al-
    ready passed thro the practical part even
    of the higher partion of the Artillery arm, my
    cadetship would only be considered as a
    necessary form which I [ am] positive I could
    run thro' in 6 months.

          This is the view of the case which many
    at this place have taken in regard to myself.
    If you are willing to assist me it can now
    be effectually done -- if not (as late
    circumstances have induced me to believe)
    I must remain contented until chance
    or other friends shall render me that assis-
    -tance.

          Under the certain expectation of kind news
    from home I have been led into expences
    which my present income will not support.
    I hinted as much in my former letter, &
    am at present in an uncomfortable situation
    I have known the time when you would not
    have suffered me long to remain so.

         


    -3-



    Whatever fault you may find with me
    I have not been ungrateful for past services
    but you blame me for the past which I
    have taken without considering the powerful
    impulses which actuated me. You will
    remember how much I had to suffer upon
    my return from the University.1 I never meant
    to offer a shadow of excuse for the infamous
    conduct of myself & others at that place.
    It was however at the commencement of that
    year that I got deeply entangled in difficulty
    which all my after good conduct in the close
    of the session (to which all here can testify)
    could not clear away. I had never been
    from home before for any length of time.
    I say again I have no-excuse to offer for my
    c [unclear: [ ondu] ] ct except the common one of youth --
    [unclear: ] -- but I repeat that I was unable [unclear: if] 2
    my life had depended upon it to bear the
    consequences of that conduct in the taunts
    & abuse that followed it even from those
    who had been my warmest friends.

          I shall wait with impatience for an


    -4-





    answer to this letter for upon it depend a
    great many of the circumstances of
    my future life -- the assurance of an
    honourable & highly successful course in
    my own country, or the prospect -- no
    certainty of an exile forever to another

          Give my love to Ma --


    I am
    Yours affectionately


    Edgar A Poe


    Notes



    [1] The University of Virginia.

    [2] "if" is included in a published transcription of the letter in Mary Newton Stanard's edition of EDGAR ALLAN POE LETTERS TILL NOW UNPUBLISHED
    In The Valentine Museum, Richmond, Virginia
    , page 101. This book, which includes facsimiles and transcriptions of all the letters in the Valentine Museum Collection, was published in 1925 by the J.B. Lippincott Company of Philadelphia.